R. Transport Corporation vs. Laguesma - DIG
R. Transport Corporation vs. Laguesma - DIG
R. Transport Corporation vs. Laguesma - DIG
LAGUESMA, IN HIS
CAPACITY AS UNDERSECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT, CHRISTIAN
LABOR ORGANIZATION OF THE PHILIPPINES (CLOP), NATIONAL FEDERATION OF LABOR UNIONS
(NAFLU), AND ASSOCIATED LABOR UNIONS (ALU-TUCP), RESPONDENTS.
G.R. No. 106830. November 16, 1993
FACTS:
Respondent Christian Labor Organization of the Philippines (CLOP), filed with the Med Arbitration Unit
of the DOLE a petition for certification election.
Med-Arbiter A. Dizon dismissed the petition on the ground that the bargaining unit sought to be
represented by respondent CLOP did not include all the eligible employees of petitioner but only the
drivers, conductors, and conductresses to the exclusion of the inspectors, inspectresses, dispatchers,
mechanics and washer boys.
Thus, respondent CLOP rectified its mistake and filed a second petition for certification election, which
included all the rank and file employees of the company, who hold non-managerial and non-
supervisorial positions.
Herein, petitioner R. Transport Corporation filed a motion to dismiss the second petition. It contended
that the dismissal of the first petition constituted res judicata. It futher argued that respondent CLOP
should have interposed an appeal to the dismissal of the first petition and its failure to do so barred it
from filing another petition for certification election.
Med-Arbiter R. Parungo rendered a decision, which ordered the conduct of a certification election.
Petitioner Corporation appealed to the DOLE Secretary, who affirmed the order of the Med-Arbiter.
The DOLE Secretary ruled that
The defense of res judicata is not obtaining in the present petition for certification election.
It is settled that for res judicata to apply there must be a final judgment on the merits on
matters put in issue.
In the instant case, ‘it could not be said that there is a final judgment on the merits of the
petition simply because the composition of the present proposed bargaining unit is different
from that in the first petition. Moreover, there are now other parties involved, and therefore,
it would not be correct to say that the parties in the said two cases are identical.
Aggrieved, petitioner Corporation filed a Motion for Reconsideration again stressing the principle of
res judicata and a Motion to Suspend Proceedings Based on Prejudicial Questions as an Addendum to
the Motion for Reconsideration. Both were denied by Undersecretary Laguesma.
1. WON the dismissal of the first petition constituted res judicata thereby barring the filing the
second petition for certification election (NO)
2. WON the second petition for certification election should have been filed after one year from
the dismissal of the first petition for certification election (NO)
3. WON the employment status of the members of respondent CLOP who joined the strike must
first be resolved before a certification election can be conducted (NO)
RULING:
1. NO.
For the principle of res judicata to apply, the following requisites must concur:
a) the former judgment or order must be final;
b) it must be a judgment or order on the merits;
c) it must have been rendered by a court having jurisdiction over the subject-matter and
the parties; and
d) there must be, between the first and second actions, identity of parties.
Here, it cannot be said that the parties in the first and second actions were identical. The first
action was dismissed by the Med-Arbiter because it excluded parties essential to the
bargaining unit such as inspectors, inspectresses, dispatchers and washer boys. The second
petition included all the employees who were excluded in the first petition. Therefore, the
Med-Arbiter was correct when he gave due course to the second petition for certification
election after respondent CLOP corrected its mistake.
2. NO.
The second petition for certification election NEED NOT be filed one year from the dismissal
of the first petition for certification election.
Under Section 3, Rule V, Book V of the Omnibus Rules Implementing the Labor Code:
Herein petitioner misread the above-mentioned provision of law. The phrase "final
certification election result" means that there was an actual conduct of election. Here, there
was no certification election conducted precisely because the first petition was dismissed, on
the ground of a defective petition which did not include all the employees who should be
properly included in the collective bargaining unit.
3. NO. The employee- members of respondent CLOP who joined the strike are entitled to
participate in the certification election regardless of the pendency of their case.
It was settled in Philippine Fruits and Vegetables Industries, Inc. v. Torres that where a case of
illegal dismissal and/or unfair labor practice was filed, the employees concerned could still
qualify to vote in the elections.
Therefore, the employees who participated in the strike, legally remain as employees of
petitioner Corporation, until either the motion to declare their employment status legally
terminated or their complaint for illegal dismissal is resolved by the NLRC. It follows that they
are also eligible to vote in certification elections.